Saturday, June 14, 2025

Baking Buttermilk Biscuits - Live From the Kitchen at Andersen Acres!

Join me live in the kitchen as I bake one of my all-time favorite comfort foods—homemade buttermilk biscuits! This easy, old-fashioned biscuit recipe has been passed down through three generations in my family—from my grandma, to my mom, to me—and I’ve been baking them for over 35 years.

Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned home baker, you’ll love how quick, simple, and delicious these biscuits are. I’ll walk you through the full recipe, share some of my favorite baking tips, and talk about the memories tied to this cozy, nostalgic dish. While the biscuits are in the oven, I’ll be chatting and answering your baking questions live—so feel free to jump into the conversation!

This stream is perfect for anyone who loves from-scratch baking, family recipes, and spending time in the kitchen with a warm, welcoming community.

🧈 Grab your flour, butter, and milk—and let’s make something delicious together.




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Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Baking Science 101: What’s Actually Happening in Your Oven?


If you've ever wondered why your cake flopped or your bread didn’t rise the way you expected, you’re not alone—and you're not a bad baker! The truth is, baking is chemistry in action. Understanding what’s really happening inside your oven can turn you from a recipe-follower into a confident, intuitive baker.

In this post, we’re going to break down the basic science behind the most common ingredients and techniques. From leavening to browning, we’ll explore the reactions that make your baked goods rise, set, and taste delicious. And don’t worry—no lab coat required.


1. Leavening: How Baked Goods Rise

Leavening is the process that gives baked goods their rise and structure. There are three main leavening methods:

a. Biological Leavening (Yeast)

Yeast is a living organism that feeds on sugar and produces carbon dioxide and alcohol. The CO₂ gets trapped in your dough, forming bubbles that cause it to expand and rise. This is a slow leavening process, which gives bread time to develop rich, complex flavors.

b. Chemical Leavening (Baking Soda & Baking Powder)

These create gas bubbles quickly when they react with moisture and/or acid.

  • Baking Soda needs an acid to activate (like buttermilk, yogurt, or lemon juice).
  • Baking Powder contains both the base and the acid and usually reacts twice—once when mixed and again in the oven.

If your recipe calls for both, it’s balancing flavor, acidity, and structure.

c. Mechanical Leavening (Air)

Think whisking egg whites or creaming butter and sugar. You’re literally whipping air into the mix. This method is key in recipes like meringues, sponge cakes, and soufflés.


2. The Role of Flour: Structure and Strength

Flour is the skeleton of your baked goods. The most commonly used type—wheat flour—contains proteins called glutenin and gliadin. When mixed with water, these proteins form gluten, the stretchy network that gives dough its structure.

  • More gluten (like in bread flour) = strong, chewy structure.
  • Less gluten (like in cake or pastry flour) = tender, soft texture.

⚠️ Overmixing can over-develop gluten, leading to tough cakes or muffins. That’s why many recipes say to mix “just until combined.”


3. Sugar: Sweetness and So Much More

Sugar does more than make things sweet. It:

  • Tenderizes by inhibiting gluten formation.
  • Caramelizes under heat, adding color and complex flavor.
  • Holds moisture, helping baked goods stay fresh longer.
  • Feeds yeast, aiding fermentation in bread.

Different sugars (white, brown, honey, molasses) behave differently, so swapping them can affect taste, color, and texture.


4. Fats: Flavor and Flakiness

Fat adds richness, flavor, and tenderness. The type of fat you use matters:

  • Butter adds flavor and can help trap air when creamed.
  • Shortening/lard creates a flakier texture, especially in pastries.
  • Oil keeps baked goods moist, especially in muffins and quick breads.

Fats coat the flour, preventing gluten from forming and resulting in a more tender texture. That’s why high-fat items like cookies are soft and crumbly instead of chewy.


5. Eggs: Binding, Leavening, and Emulsifying

Eggs are baking’s multitaskers. They:

  • Bind ingredients together.
  • Trap air when beaten, adding lightness.
  • Set structure as they cook.
  • Emulsify, creating smooth, even textures.

The yolk is rich in fat and flavor, while the white contributes protein and structure. Room temperature eggs work best because they mix more evenly and whip up better.


6. Liquids: Activating, Hydrating, and Dissolving

Water, milk, cream, and juice hydrate the flour and dissolve other ingredients like sugar and salt. Liquids also:

  • Activate leavening agents.
  • Help control temperature in doughs.
  • Affect crust softness (milk) vs crispness (water).

Milk, for example, adds fat, sugars, and proteins—leading to a richer crumb and browner crust than water alone.


7. Salt: The Silent Hero

Salt enhances flavor, but it also strengthens the gluten structure and helps regulate yeast activity. Without salt, bread can taste flat or ferment too quickly. Just a little goes a long way.


8. The Oven: Where the Magic Happens

Once your batter or dough hits the oven, a series of transformations take place:

a. Oven Spring (first 10 minutes)

Leavening agents produce a final burst of gas. Steam also expands, lifting your baked good. This is when most of the rise happens.

b. Setting Structure

As heat continues, proteins (from flour and eggs) coagulate, and starches gelatinize. The structure “sets,” locking your bake into its final shape.

c. Browning Reactions

Two main reactions occur here:

  • Maillard Reaction: Proteins + sugars = rich golden crusts and deep flavors.
  • Caramelization: Sugars break down into golden, nutty compounds.

Both are responsible for that irresistible aroma that fills your kitchen.


9. Why Things Go Wrong: Common Baking Fails Explained

Here are a few examples of baking mishaps—and the science behind them:

  • Flat cookies? Butter may have been too warm, or the dough wasn’t chilled.
  • Cakes that sink? Overbeaten batter, opening the oven too soon, or expired baking powder.
  • Tough muffins? Overmixed the batter and overdeveloped gluten.
  • Cracked cheesecake? Cooled too fast or overbaked. Egg proteins contracted and pulled apart.

10. Tips for Becoming a More Confident Baker

  • Weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for accuracy.
  • Preheat your oven fully before baking.
  • Don’t skip the science—read your recipe before you begin.
  • Test your leavening by adding a pinch to vinegar (baking soda) or water (baking powder).
  • Let things cool completely before cutting—structure continues setting after baking.

Final Thoughts: It’s Not Just Baking, It’s Chemistry

Once you understand the why behind the how, baking becomes less intimidating—and a lot more fun. You start noticing how dough feels when it’s properly kneaded or how batter should look before it bakes. You gain the confidence to tweak recipes, swap ingredients, and fix problems as they come.

So the next time your cookies spread too far or your bread doesn’t rise, take a deep breath, put on your metaphorical lab coat, and do a little detective work. The answer’s usually right there in the science.

Because baking isn’t just an art—it’s edible alchemy.

Wednesday, June 04, 2025

Yeast Doesn’t Hate You – You’re Just Not Feeding It Right


Let’s talk about yeast. That moody little microorganism that either makes your dough rise like magic… or sit there like a sad, sticky lump of regret.

First things first: yeast isn’t your enemy. It’s just picky. Give it the right conditions—warmth, moisture, food—and it’ll happily puff up your bread like a proud little balloon artist. But treat it wrong, and it’ll sulk. No rise, no fluff, no glory.

So what does yeast actually want?

  • Warm water (but not too warm—yeast has delicate feelings and will die in hot water like a Victorian lady in a scandal).
  • A little sugar to snack on (yeast is a sugar fiend).
  • Time. Seriously. Yeast doesn’t do “rush jobs.”

Skip any of these, and your bread will call it quits faster than a cat in a bathtub.

And if you're wondering whether that packet in the back of your pantry from 2021 still works... it probably doesn’t. Get fresh yeast. It’s cheaper than therapy and way more rewarding.

So next time your dough doesn’t rise, don’t take it personally. Just remember: yeast doesn’t hate you—it just wants to be understood.

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

The Secret Science Behind Perfect Baked Goods


Have you ever followed a recipe exactly—only to have your cookies spread too thin, your cake fall flat, or your bread come out too dense? You’re not alone. Baking isn't just an art; it’s also a science. And once you understand a few of the basics, you can start baking with confidence—and yes, with flair.

At Baking With Flare, we believe great baking comes from equal parts love, practice, and knowledge. So today, we’re diving into the science that happens behind the scenes in your oven.


1. Baking Is Chemistry

Every time you bake, you’re creating chemical reactions. Leavening agents like baking soda and baking powder produce carbon dioxide bubbles that make your baked goods rise. Eggs provide structure through proteins that firm up when heated. Sugar doesn't just sweeten—it also tenderizes, caramelizes, and helps with browning.


2. Ingredient Temperatures Matter

There’s a reason many recipes call for room-temperature eggs, butter, or milk. Cold ingredients don’t blend well, which affects texture and structure. Room-temp ingredients create smoother batters and more even results.


3. Measuring Matters More Than You Think

Baking is much less forgiving than cooking. Using too much flour (especially if scooped instead of spooned and leveled) can lead to dry, heavy results. Likewise, a little too much liquid can ruin the structure of a delicate cake. Weighing ingredients with a kitchen scale gives the most consistent results.


4. Oven Myths & Mistakes

Not all ovens heat evenly. Hot spots can lead to burnt edges and undercooked centers. Always preheat your oven fully, use an oven thermometer to check accuracy, and avoid opening the door too often—heat loss can change your bake time drastically.


5. Let It Cool

We know it’s hard to wait, but cooling time isn’t just about temperature. Baked goods continue to set and finish cooking even after leaving the oven. Cutting too early into a cake or loaf can collapse the structure and affect the texture.


Tips for Better Bakes

  • Preheat your oven before you do anything else.
  • Use an oven thermometer to double-check the internal temperature.
  • Spoon and level flour to avoid adding too much.
  • Cool your baked goods completely before slicing or decorating.
  • Trust the process—and take notes so you can tweak for next time!

Final Thoughts

Understanding the science behind baking transforms frustration into fascination. When you know what each ingredient does and why steps matter, you’re not just following a recipe—you’re crafting something intentional.

So the next time you whip up a batch of muffins or knead a loaf of bread, remember: you’re not just baking. You’re experimenting, learning, and creating with knowledge.

Bake boldly, bake smart, and always bake with flare.

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Quick Tips for Baking Success

Baking is more art than science sometimes. When you begin, there will be failures, there will be mistakes, and there will be some confusion and hilarity. Learning to bake takes time and experience, there's no way around that. Sure, it's easier if you've been raised around people who were baking, but anyone can learn to bake. Anyone. You can learn to manipulate yeast dough, shape cookies, and produce lovely cakes with a little time and effort.

But you need somewhere to begin When you first start baking, there are a few things you can do to help ensure your success. First, choose recipes that are simple enough and have few directions. Starting small will help you gain the confidence you need to tackle bigger projects. When you are looking for a cookbook or checking out a recipe online, look at the reviews. Are people complaining that it's bland? Are some people saying that the recipe just doesn't work? Maybe move on and pick a different recipe. Choosing a solid recipe is the first step in creating something delicious.

Practice makes perfect, so don't give up on a recipe if it doesn't work the first time. Try again. And again. If you've chosen a good recipe, you'll figure it out. And your first few attempts may not be perfect, but they'll likely still be tasty. Tasty is good, so keep at it.

Read through the entire recipe before you start baking. Make sure you know exactly what ingredients you need and what equipment will be necessary. Also make sure you have enough time to complete the recipe. If it takes 45 minutes to cook but you'll be leaving the house in 30 minutes, you definitely should not start yet. It seems an obvious thing, but it happens a lot.

Review the techniques the recipe calls for. If you don't know how to brown butter but the recipe called for the browning of butter, it's time to learn how before you tackle the recipe itself. Look up those things you're unfamiliar with in order to ensure your success.

Take a few moments before you begin to measure out your ingredients and set out the equipment you'll need. This will make the entire process go a lot smoother. You'll also not have to go looking for an ingredient that you left in the cupboard. 

Most people don't love cleaning, but tidy up as you go. Baking with a mess around you can lead to confusion and mistakes. Place dirty dishes in the sink and put items away as you use them. This will keep you from trying to use an ingredient twice or skipping something unintentionally.

If you've never attempted the recipe before, focus on it and only it. Distractions can lead to mistakes, so make sure you won't be interrupted. This is especially important if you're working on a complex recipe. You don't want to have to start over again.

Most importantly, relax and enjoy yourself. Baking should be fun, not frustrating. Take your time, immerse yourself in what you're doing, and don't be afraid to experiment. Recipes are not scripture, after all. They can be altered to suit you.

Specialty Cakes: Dual-Layer Pumpkin Cheesecake

I love pumpkin. Absolutely love it. Cheesecake is also delicious. So if you put the two of them together, you have a treat that is doubly delicious. How can this simple recipe not be a hit.

In this recipe, I've used a prepared graham cracker crust. It's easy enough to make your own if you prefer. It really doesn't matter that much. You can even make this cheesecake without the crust. It is solid enough that it can simply be baked in a pan.

Ingredients

1 prepared graham cracker crust

8 ounces cream cheese, softened

½ cup sugar

½ tsp vanilla extract

2 eggs

½ cup pumpkin puree

½ tsp ground cinnamon

¼ tsp ground nutmeg

1 pinch ground cloves

½ cup whipped topping (optional)

cocoa powder for dusting (optional)

Preparation

Preheat the oven to 325°F (165°C). In a large bowl, cream together cream cheese, sugar, and vanilla using an electric mixer. Blend in eggs one at a time, making sure the mixture is completely smooth afterwards. Remove 1 cup of the cream cheese mixture and spread it over the prepared graham cracker crust. Set the crust aside for the moment.

To the remaining batter in the bowl add the pumpkin, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. Stir gently until everything is well combined. Then stir again. You want a smooth and consistent batter. Very gently spread the pumpkin batter over the batter that's already in the crust. The point is to have the pumpkin batter above the plain batter, so don't mix the two. Spread gently.

Bake in the preheated oven for 40 minutes, until the center is almost set. A little cracking may occur. This is normal. Remove cheesecake from the oven and allow to cool completely. Then refrigerate for at least 3 hours.

You can eat the cheesecake as is, or you can top with whipped topping first. Alternatively, use cocoa powder to sprinkle over the top of the cheesecake. I've used a stencil for cocoa powder in the cheesecake in the picture. You can use a stencil or just sprinkle the cocoa as you please.

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Specialty Cakes: White Chocolate Sachertorte

There's a lot to be said for a classic dessert. Sachertortes are often a dark chocolate dessert, but if you change it up a bit and use white chocolate, you can have a delicious and satisfying treat that everyone will love. This is my younger son's favorite dessert, so we make it often.

You can change the jam, if you like. Try strawberry, apricot, blackberry, or even blueberry for an entirely different flavor. If you don't want to make your own icing, you can simply warm up some store bought icing so you can pour it over the cake. It will still taste amazing.

Ingredients

For the Cake

6 oz white chocolate

6 large eggs, separated

⅔ cup sugar

1½ tbsp vanilla sugar

⅔ butter, softened (do not use margarine)

¼ icing sugar

1⅛ cup flour

For the Filling and Icing

⅔ cup raspberry jam

1 sheet gelatine

6 oz milk chocolate

½ cup whipping cream

Preparation

Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Spray the inside of an 8-inch springform pan with cooking spray. Alternatively, you can grease the pan with butter and dust with flour to prevent the cake from sticking. Chop the white chocolate and melt it. You can use the microwave or a pan on the stove, but I prefer to use a small chocolate melter or even fondue pot. You can use whatever you like as long as the chocolate is melted until smooth. Be careful with white chocolate. It's easy to overheat it. Warm it until just melted. Set it aside to cool for a moment.

Whisk the egg whites (the yolk should be in a separate bowl) until they are semi-stiff. Add sugar and vanilla sugar and continue to whisk until glossy and stiff peaks form. Set aside. In a separate bowl, whisk the butter and icing sugar until the mixture is creamy. Add the egg yolk and whisk. Now add the white chocolate and whisk until smooth. Gently fold the egg whites into the chocolate mixture. Add flour and fold in again. Gently. You don't want to break down the egg whites.

Pour the batter into the springform pan. Smooth the top and bake for 25 minutes, then turn down the oven to 340°F (170°C) and bake for a further 35 minutes. Do not underbake. Remove from oven and set aside to cool. Do not try to remove from pan until the cake has cooled completely.

When the cake is cool, cut it in half horizontally. Set the top half aside. Warm the raspberry jam until you can pour it. Spread about a third of the jam on the bottom half of the cake. Place the other half of the cake on top, almost making a jam sandwich. Brush the remaining jam over the rest of the cake. Don't miss any spots. This will keep the cake moist and enhance the flavor.

Now make the icing. Soak the gelatine sheet in cold water. While it's soaking, chop the milk chocolate. Add the chocolate to the cream and heat until the chocolate melts, being careful not to warm it too much. You want it melted enough to pour, but that's it. As soon as the chocolate is melted, remove from heat and take the gelatine sheet out of the water. It should be pliable and soft by now. Add it to the chocolate, whisking it all together. Allow the icing mix to cool for about 20 minutes, then pour it over the cake.

Let the icing set for at least 6 hours. Overnight is better. When the cake is set, you can decorate it if you like, or you can just leave it covered in chocolate. In the pictures here, I have used a set of plastic stencils to make a bunny pattern. My younger son loves bunnies, and this cake was for him.